Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Muscle Activation Techniques (MAT)


  • Normal muscle function
    • Stretch
      • the muscle (extrafusal fibers) are placed under stretch
      • the muscle spindle (infrafusal fibers) sense tension under stretch
        • relays it back to the CNS
      • CNS stimulates the alpha motor neurons
        • stimulates the muscle to contract and resist the tension
    • Contraction
      • the muscle (extrafusal fibers) shorten in contraction
      • the muscle spindle (infrafusal fibers) slacken
        • lack of contractile force regulation
      • CNS stimulates gamma motor neurons 
        • gamma motor neurons stimulates the muscle spindle to contract
          • infrafusal fiber contraction stimulates alpha motor neurons
        • stimulates the muscle to contract and resist tension
  • Traumatized muscles decrease the sensitivity of the muscle spindle
    • muscle becomes less capable of regulating tension relative to stretch or load
    • decreased gamma motor neuron stimulation during contraction
      • more contraction, greater slack, less responsive spindle
    • actin and myosin crossbridges overlap excessively = inefficient 
    • biomechanically inefficent as well 
  • Reciprocal Inhibition and MAT
    • If proper neurological input is not being sent to an agonist muscle, proper inhibition is not occurring of the antagonist muscle as well
    • the antagonist muscle is more active consistently becoming hypertonic
      • becoming tight
    • thus muscle tightness caused by traumatized weakened muscles

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